Graduate Program in Pharmaceutical Science, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal 59078-900, RN, Brazil.
Undergraduate Program of Nutrition, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal 59078-900, RN, Brazil.
Nutrients. 2023 Nov 1;15(21):4642. doi: 10.3390/nu15214642.
The new coronavirus infection represents a serious threat to global health and economies. In this sense, it is paramount to know the nutritional factors that may be related to the prognosis of the disease. Evidence shows that vitamin A may play an important preventive and therapeutic role in supporting respiratory infections as in COVID-19. The aim of our study was to evaluate the association of vitamin A (retinol) status with the prognosis of the disease. A case-control study from a cohort study was conducted in Brazil between May and October 2020. The study population was chosen by convenience, consisting of participants diagnosed with COVID-19. Recruitment was carried out using different approaches, including through dissemination on social media and in four hospitals in the city of Natal/RN, Brazil, recruiting participants from the COVID-19 ward and hospitalized participants who tested positive for the disease. The participants were allocated into two groups according to severity, with a group of mild ( = 88) or critical ( = 106) patients and compared to a control group (selected before the pandemic, = 46). The extraction of retinol serum was performed and analyzed using the high-performance liquid chromatography method (HPLC). The retinol level was calculated in mmol/L, and levels below 0.7 μmol/L (20 µg/dL) were considered to be a vitamin A deficiency. Our findings suggest that the participants with mild and critical COVID-19 had lower retinol levels compared to the healthy controls ( = 0.03). In addition, milder cases of COVID-19 were associated with increased symptoms and prolonged symptoms after 90 days since the beginning of infection. However, the survival analysis showed no association with higher cases of death among participants with vitamin A deficiency ( = 0.509). More studies are needed to understand how nutritional status, including vitamin A levels, can influence prognosis and is a risk factor for the development of long COVID syndrome.
新型冠状病毒感染对全球健康和经济构成严重威胁。在这方面,了解可能与疾病预后相关的营养因素至关重要。有证据表明,维生素 A 可能在支持呼吸道感染(如 COVID-19)方面发挥重要的预防和治疗作用。我们的研究目的是评估维生素 A(视黄醇)状态与疾病预后的关系。这是一项在巴西于 2020 年 5 月至 10 月进行的队列研究中的病例对照研究。该研究人群通过方便抽样选择,包括被诊断患有 COVID-19 的参与者。通过不同的方法进行招募,包括在社交媒体上进行传播以及在巴西纳塔尔市的四家医院进行招募,从 COVID-19 病房招募参与者和因该疾病住院的阳性参与者。参与者根据严重程度分为两组,一组为轻症( = 88)或危重症( = 106)患者,并与对照组(在大流行前选择, = 46)进行比较。使用高效液相色谱法(HPLC)提取血清视黄醇并进行分析。视黄醇水平以 mmol/L 计算,水平低于 0.7 μmol/L(20 µg/dL)被认为是维生素 A 缺乏。我们的研究结果表明,与健康对照组相比,患有轻症和危重症 COVID-19 的参与者视黄醇水平较低( = 0.03)。此外,轻症 COVID-19 与症状加重和感染开始后 90 天症状持续时间延长有关。然而,生存分析显示,维生素 A 缺乏症参与者的死亡病例没有更高的关联性( = 0.509)。需要进一步研究以了解营养状况(包括维生素 A 水平)如何影响预后以及是否是长 COVID 综合征发展的危险因素。